Covid-19 aggravating gender inequalities
What you need to know:
- Women who were employed on temporary contracts and laid off in this crisis are less likely to be rehired when things settle
- Healthcare system has been upset; focus has shifted to addressing the pandemic, thus overlooking women and girls’ essential services
- Stressful situations can lead to conflicts, which can lead to more intimate partner violence
The Covid-19 outbreak has brought women and men an unexpected economic hardship.
There are people in Kenya, especially those working in horticulture, hospitality, retail and manufacturing sectors who have either been laid off or sent home on unpaid leave because companies cannot sustain them.
Women who depend on daily wages as domestic workers are jobless because the middle class no longer need their services; most are working from home, and fear getting infected by outsiders.
Open air markets are closed and where they are open, profits are not forthcoming as only a handful of customers are buying their merchandise.
Stressed couples find themselves in a house with children who need to eat whether there is money or not!
Curfew
Then the government announces the 7pm to 5am curfew.
How companies and the government respond to Covid-19, presents a breeding ground for aggravating gender inequalities, experts on gender equality argue.
“There are those inequalities that might actually be magnified at the end of this (pandemic),” says Dr Cleopatra Mugyenyi, Director of International Centre for Research on Women (ICRW).
“For example, the women who were employed on temporary contracts and laid off in this crisis are less likely to be rehired when things begin to pick up,” she says.
She says businesses would prefer to hire men because they are seen to be more reliable as they do not have childcare needs like women.
Women will, therefore, be subjected to a new level of discrimination as they seek job opportunities post-Covid-19.
Healthcare system
The healthcare system has been upset; focus has shifted to addressing the pandemic, thus overlooking women and girls’ essential services, she says.
“With measures that there is no going out for non-essential work and health systems focusing on coronavirus; what happens to sexual and reproductive health? What happens if you need to get your contraceptive or HIV drugs? ” she asks.
“With the men sitting at home with no football matches to entertain them, they are likely to find leisure in sex, resulting to unplanned pregnancies, causing untold stress to the woman,” says Ms Memory Kachambwa, Executive Director for African Women’s Development and Communication Network (Femnet) while emphasising on why access to contraceptive cannot be overlooked at this time.
Women’s mental health is equally at risk due to the new norm of interactions at community and household level, affecting her freedom to enjoy a stress-free life.
The pandemic is economically straining households, a pressure which would result to intimate partner violence.
“Stressful situations can lead to conflicts, which can lead to more intimate partner violence,” says ICRW’s Dr Mugyenyi.
Domestic violence
Studies have shown that homes are among the unsafe places for women as this is where they are sexually, physically and emotionally abused by spouses or relatives.
Mr John Wanyoike, a Nakuru based gender equality advocate says men get stressed when they can’t provide for their families, and confining them into homes increases their stress levels.
Unfortunately, the woman becomes the victim of his disturbed mental state, as they become hostile and violent, he says.
Femnet’s Executive Director agrees with Mr Wanyoike’s view.
She asks: “We want people to stay at home, what sought of homes?”
“What is lacking is specific proposition like call centres or publishing hotlines or finding safe spaces to provide refuge for women and girls subjected to sexual and gender-based violence,” she notes.
Water
Water is at the core of Covid-19’s preventive measures and while it would save women and girls’ lives, access to the precious commodity opens room for violation of their rights.
The numerous trips women and girls make to distant water points not only exposes them to rape and defilement, but also affects their physical and mental health, says Ms Kachambwa, Femnet’s Executive Director.
“Can we have free water points not just for washing hands but also for cooking?” she asks.
“Can we have water in every 500 metres’ distance? We need these practical responses to avoid widening gender inequalities,” she adds
Ensuring children are free from malnutrition is predominantly a woman’s role.Covid-19 makes it a tough role to play.
Closure of markets have cut them off from the affordable supply of nutritious food, risking the health of the young ones.]
“Who will bear the burden of making sure the children regain their immunity? It is, of course, the woman,” notes Ms Kachambwa.
Food relief
She says government need to provide a food package to the households, which can be distributed through the local administration to secure the immunity of men, women, children and persons with disabilities.
Even as the government would consider food relief, it would be faced with another problem; a high population of infected women, the people who lead the way in collecting food supplements for the family.
Ms Pascalia Makonjo, gender advisor in Busia County argues that women are more vulnerable to infections from the male partners.
“You see, men have multiple partners, they go infect this woman in a social place and return home to infect his wife. Then the wife infects the children, her mother and her grandmother,” she says stating that her argument is based on her observations on the trends of infections in the country.
Economically, women are likely to make three steps backwards once the coronavirus effect is over; they bear the super burden of unpaid labour.
Secondly, they work in informal sectors with no safety nets such as insurance, and thirdly, companies would prefer male workforce due perceived commitment.
On unpaid care, Ms Kachambwa says: “Right now, unpaid care is weighing down women and any request for help from their husbands would attract violence as the society does not support sharing of unpaid care.”
Mental health
“This is causing the women a lot of mental stress and unfortunately, the social support systems like churches and women groups have been disrupted. They have nowhere to relieve themselves. We need to think about a measure addressing mental health of women if they are to remain productive after this crisis.”
Dr Mugyenyi, however, hopes men’s exposure to the burden of care women carry would change them to become supportive care providers.
“You may find that men are taking up more child care roles because they have been forced to be at home to see what their wives go through,” says Dr Mugyenyi.
Although, President Uhuru Kenyatta offered tax relief incentives on March 25, Dr Mugyenyi says the directive excluded women in the informal economy, hence fails to cushion them from collapse of their businesses.
“How do you expect the woman who sells vegetables every day to survive to rebuild her business if the markets have been closed and she has to use her capital to feed her children,” wonders Mr Wanyoike, the gender equality advocate.